Angry Uber protests spark Paris travel chaos

Angry protests against Uber have sparked travel chaos in Paris as French taxi drivers launched a nationwide strike against the popular U.S.-based ridesharing service.

A number of violent incidents erupted during Thursday's protests, which follow weeks of rising opposition to the taxi app.

The BBC reports that taxi drivers blocked the roads to the French capital’s airports and the peripherique, the main ring road around the city, building blockades and burning tires. Blockades were also set up in the southern French cities of Marseille and Aix-en-Provence, it reported.

As a result of the strike, Aeroports de Paris urged passengers to use public transport when travelling to the city’s airports of Charles de Gaulle and Orly. “Taxi drivers strike: blocked road access. Come to the airport by RER B,” it posted on its website, referring to the train connecting Charles de Gaulle and Orly to the center of Paris.

Tweets from musician Courtney Love Cobain strongly suggested that she was caught up in the Paris violence Thursday. Love Cobain tweeted that her taxi was “ambushed” and added that protesters were “beating the cars with metal bats.”

Related Image

French striking taxi drivers block the access to Orly airport, south of Paris, France, during a national protest against car-sharing service Uber June 25, 2015.
(REUTERS/Christian Hartmann)

Despite repeated rulings outlawing Uber's lowest-cost service, its drivers continue to ply France's roads and the American company is actively recruiting. Uber's more expensive livery service is still legal.

Taxi drivers complain that the company unfairly undercuts them and in recent weeks nearly 100 Uber drivers have been attacked, sometimes while carrying customers. In one case, a taxi passenger was left with a broken face and black eye after he praised Uber.